Close Please enter your Username and Password


oldbookiex 102M
12 posts
5/27/2006 2:50 pm

Last Read:
6/4/2006 8:43 pm

adultery


Webster's (MW 11) defines it:

: voluntary sexual intercourse between a married man and someone other than his wife or between a married woman and someone other than her husband; also : an act of adultery

Intercourse: At bottom, that's what it's about--intercourse of the sexual kind. Again Webster keeps us on course on intercourse:

1 : connection or dealings between persons or groups
2 : exchange especially of thoughts or feelings : COMMUNION
3 : physical sexual contact between individuals that involves the genitalia of at least one person *anal intercourse* *oral intercourse*; especially : SEXUAL INTERCOURSE 1 *heterosexual intercourse*

These blogs, of course, all of them, are acts of intercourse of the first kind, dealings between persons or groups. Most of them deal with connections (of the sexual kind).

Exchanges of thoughts or feelings, dealings with feelings. . . . Feelings up (ancient phrase), feeling out, feeling for, feeling the heat.

Physical contact between individuals that involves the genitalia--Ah, there, Merriam Webster, now you're cooking! But you quickly add "of at least one person." Now comes example time: "*anal intercourse* *oral intercourse*; One wonders if Bill Clinton turned away from this when he insisted that Monica's blowjobs (her term) were not sex.

Finally MW 11 brings us the whole truth:
"especially SEXUAL INTERCOURSE" (capitals theirs).

As to presidential blow jobs, the dictionary has a word for that too: "(usually vulgar) an act of fellatio: oral stimulation of the penis."

This leaves us manu propria (Latin: "in one's own hands") when desperation offers a practice defined in 1603 as masturbation.

In one's own hand the ardor flows
As the penis slowly grows,
Erupts, adopts less stately pose,
And shrinks away to where God knows!

Katie_au_lait 78F
7026 posts
5/28/2006 12:39 am

Lol, bookie, love the verse, those 16th century guys were no shrinking violets when it came to bawdiness! I suppose Victorian hypocrisy sent it undercover...but they couldn't stop it completely. Here's a couple of the milder verses from "The Ball O' Kirriemuir"
Kirriemuir is a town in Angus, Scotland, it's the birthplace of J.M. Barrie.

The queen was in the kitchen,
Eatin' bread and honey.
The king was in the kitchen maid
And she was in the money.

John Brown, the parson
Was quite annoyed to see
Four and twenty maidenheads
A-hangin' from a tree.

The song has been growing since the 19th century, I think there are around 40 verses and I believe there's an American version, no idea what it's called though.I'm sure you'll know!

Katie


Katie_au_lait 78F
7026 posts
5/29/2006 6:36 am

Lol Ima! It's not the same song...is it? NO...cant be!! My dad sang the blackbird one to me...and he wouldn't...would he? He did have a wicked sense of humour, now that I think about it!!! And it does have a similar tune. S'pose I'll never know for sure now!


ZoraNeale 78F

6/3/2006 10:15 am

hehehehehe.......what is on your mind today in the subliminal sense? Are you wandering somewhere? Well, expect to get lots of views! I am still chuckling.

=^..^=